Amadeus describes its new ticket-exchange system, which it made available to all of its U.S. agent clients on July 14, as a tool that enables travel agents to save time, provide better service and sell more.

As enticing as those promises are, agents might be most interested in Amadeus’ assurance that the system will have the effect of “virtually eliminating debit memos related to exchanges.”

Shelly Younger, manager of settlement services for ARC, has examined the new Amadeus exchange tools and used softer language but likes the system’s potential.

“Yes, it would have a direct impact on potentially reducing debit memos for Amadeus users,” she said.

Amadeus Exchange Relief offers agents three servicing options for ticket exchanges. 

Using the free “Do It Myself” option, agents enter the ticket-exchange information manually but with the assistance of a step-by-step guide that interacts with the passenger name record.

The first of two fee-based options is “Do It Automatically,” in which agents provide basic information about the ticket exchange, which the software processes.

The top and most innovative option is “Do It for Me,” in which agents submit the exchange to a specially trained Amadeus employee for processing, the only GDS program of its kind, according to both Amadeus and Younger.

Amadeus COO Vic Pynn declined to say how much these tools will cost but did say that “Do It for Me” would be the more expensive option. Agents can use the automated option for free until Sept. 30. “Do It for Me” has a charge immediately, though it is half off until Sept. 30.

Amadeus beta tested the new system for six months before its release.

“We needed to come up with a product that had the ability to reduce the pain of exchange and debit memos,” Pynn said.

To offer the “Do It for Me” service, Amadeus trained a dozen staff members based at call centers in Argentina and Costa Rica whose sole job is handling ticket exchanges.

Amadeus will guarantee the exchanges for agents who use either of the paid options; if any of those transactions result in debit memos, it will be Amadeus, not the agent, that is on the hook.

Those guarantees, Younger said, coupled with the system’s enhanced interface, should provide a substantial reduction in ticket-exchange debit memos for customers.

Combined, exchanges and refunds accounted for just 12% to 14% of $138 million worth of debit memos issued by airlines in 2014, according to ARC. But Younger said that because of the complexities involved in exchanges, “they take up a larger portion of time to research.” Partial exchanges and exchanges on international tickets can be especially complicated.

ARC data show that agents are far more likely to delay payment on debit memos issued on exchanges and refunds than for other types of transactions; 55% of the dollar value of unpaid exchange or refund debit memos were more than 180 days old as of July 14. ARC was unable to decouple exchanges and refunds within its data.

For all unpaid debit memos, just 23% of the value was on memos issued more than 180 days ago.

It’s not just Amadeus and Younger who are bullish on the new system. Tonia Valentine, a corporate travel adviser for Aladdin Travel in Winston-Salem, N.C., said she spends up to 30 minutes processing complicated ticket exchanges. After participating in a beta test of the Amadeus Exchange Relief system, Valentine said those transactions can now be handled in just a couple minutes.

“It has taken a lot of the burden off me,” she said.

After attending an Amadeus Exchange Relief webinar last week, Susan Garza, vice president of operations for Uniglobe Travel, said the “Do It for Me” option “looks pretty remarkable.” How much she will use the service depends on the cost, she said.

Still, on the question of whether Amadeus Exchange Relief will steeply curtail exchange debit memos, travel industry lawyer Mark Pestronk said the devil is in the details. GDS providers, he said, often find ways around the guarantees they provide against debit memos on ticket purchases. Pynn, though, said Amadeus plans to stand fully behind its guarantee with the new system.

“I do not see exceptions,” he said.

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